Karen Knorr: Scavi is on view at Danziger Gallery from February 26 through April 17, 2026. This ongoing series takes its title from the Italian word for “excavations,” signaling a sustained meditation on what lies beneath the surface of history.
Karen Knorr began the project after extended visits to the archaeological sites surrounding Naples, where layers of ash and time preserved entire cities in suspended animation. The exhibition brings these encounters into the photographic realm, weaving antiquity into the present through a language that is at once meticulous and imaginative.
In 79 AD, the eruption of Mount Vesuvius engulfed the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum, preserving frescoed walls, domestic objects, and even the contours of human and animal bodies beneath volcanic debris. Today these sites hold designation as UNESCO World Heritage landmarks, their painted surfaces revealing scenes of daily life alongside episodes drawn from Greek mythology. Banquets, gardens, and household rituals share space with tales such as Leda and the Swan or the flight of Frisso and Elle. Knorr engages directly with these visual narratives, reanimating them through carefully constructed photographic tableaux.
Animals occupy a central position in
Scavi, as they have throughout Knorr’s career. In the ancient world, exotic creatures signaled wealth and imperial reach; monkeys, parrots, leopards, and lions inhabited villas as emblems of status. Archaeological casts also attest to their vulnerability, uncovered alongside their human counterparts. Knorr inserts animals into her compositions with deliberate poise, positioning them within frescoed interiors as both witnesses and protagonists. Their presence collapses temporal distance, suggesting continuity between mythic past and contemporary consciousness.
Through digital precision and art historical reference, Knorr constructs images that feel excavated rather than merely staged.
Scavi reflects on fragility, spectacle, and endurance, reminding viewers that civilizations rise, flourish, and vanish, yet stories persist—etched into walls, carried by animals, and reimagined through the lens.
Image:
Karen Knorr. Bacchus in Attendance, House of Neptune and Amphitrite, Herculaneum, 2024 © Karen Knorr.